The Russian detained journalists are being investigated on the charges of “aiding the terrorist groups”. Screenshot from YouTube (Life-Maria Channel) / YouTube

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) has urged Kiev authorities to release the Russian journalists captured in eastern Ukraine, saying that intimidation and obstruction of media working in the country is “unacceptable.”

The OSCE’s representative on freedom of the media, Dunja
Mijatovic, has addressed the coup-imposed acting Ukrainian
Interior Minister Arsen Avakov in a letter, urging to release the
LifeNews journalists detained by Kiev forces on Sunday and
thoroughly investigate the incident, Itar-Tass reports.

Mijatovic has condemned the harassment of journalists in Ukraine,
noting that on May 15-16 a host of Russian journalists from
Channel One, NTV, TVC and Zvezda channels were denied entrance at
the country’s border despite “all of them have been
accredited by the Ukrainian authorities for covering the
presidential elections.”

In the letter, the OSCE representative has urged to “stop
intimidating and threatening members of the media,” stressing
that journalists must be allowed to do their jobs without fearing
for their security.

The political powers in Ukraine “must fully realize that
obstruction of the freedom of media is unacceptable,” Mijatovic
said.

The detained journalists, Oleg Sidyakin and Marat Saichenko, are
being investigated on the charges of “aiding the terrorist
groups,” deputy secretary of Ukraine’s National Security and
Defense Council (SNBO), Victoria Sumar, wrote on her Facebook
page.

She added that there is “direct video evidence” of her
claims, pointing at footage released on Monday showing Ukrainian
troops rudely forcing a group of handcuffed people to get down on
their knees and looking through belongings that appeared to have
belonged to them.

Along with a close-up of the documents of two LifeNews
journalists, the video showed some journalistic equipment, a pile
of Ukrainian hrivnyas and Russian rubles, and a MANPAD with
inscriptions in Polish. The third man shown kneeling on the
ground was not identified.

The Ukrainian Security Service said on Monday, without
elaborating, that two Russian citizens detained in the Donetsk
Region with video equipment have been brought to Kiev for
interrogation.

Meanwhile, a member of Russia’s presidential Human Rights Council
negotiating with Kiev authorities, Maksim Shevchenko, said that
the journalists are being accused of allegedly taking part in
“violent interrogations” of ‘Alfa’ Ukrainian special
service officers, and asking questions.

Shevchenko said he believes that the detained journalists did not
take part in any interrogations, but some other journalists did,
and in this sense LifeNews reporters were “set up” by
those other people. The human rights activist said the council
will ask distinguished Kiev lawyers to defend the LifeNews
journalists in court.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Monday stressed that
the Russian journalists detained in the Donetsk Region must be
released immediately.

“We are concerned that during combat actions, which are led
by [Ukrainian] armed forces with the participation of radicals,
extremists, militants of the Right Sector and other groups, some
journalists are suffering. Very often they are detained, faced
with fictitious demands, which do not fit into generally
recognized norms. The latter concerns two journalists from the
LifeNews channel,” Lavrov said.

According to Lavrov, Moscow has been using all available OSCE
channels, urging the organization to facilitate the journalists’
release.

LifeNews journalists meanwhile started a Twitter campaign under
the hashtag #SaveOurGuys. In just hours, thousands have shared
their pictures with the hashtag written on sheets of paper, or
retweeted them.

Representatives from the Russian Union of Journalists started
OSCE-brokered Vienna negotiations with the counterparts from
Ukraine on Monday. The Ukrainian side has been asked to help
prevent cases of detention and harassment of Russian journalists.

The union’s head, Pavel Gusev, told Itar-Tass that it is
appealing to international organizations, including the OSCE,
with a statement demanding the reporters’ release.

“This is a heinous campaign, when the journalists are being
presented as terrorists and their work is obstructed...All the
actions of the Ukrainian side contradict with international
norms,” Gusev said, calling on Kiev to free the Russian
journalists and apologize to them.

Numerous cases of Kiev-installed authorities banning Russian
media workers from entering Ukraine have intensified, along with
cases of their detention and deportation by special services
and law enforcement for covering the events in eastern Ukraine.

Moreover, several cases of Ukrainian troops firing at people with cameras, even at those
wearing blue press vests, have been reported. A video journalist
working for RT’s Ruptly crew in the volatile eastern Ukrainian
city of Mariupol was shot at and seriously injured during Kiev’s military operation on May 9. A
medical jet sent for him was allowed to land in Donetsk only
after three days of negotiations.

‘Kiev very keen to stop journalists’

The situation with the LifeNews crew is “bad news” for
journalists working in Ukraine and for the international
community, and it will only get worse as the Ukrainian election –
set for May 25 – nears, Martin McCauley, an Eastern Europe expert
from the University of London, told RT.

“In the week up to next Sunday’s presidential election, the
situation will be very tense and the Kiev authorities will be
very keen to stop journalists whom they regard as supporting the
other side, or supporting separatism, and so on, from doing their
jobs,” McCauley said.

According to the analyst, the international community should
“do more” to ensure the rights of journalists are
observed in Ukraine.

“It is up to the OSCE and the European Union and others to
make clear to the authorities in Kiev that journalists should be
allowed to do their job. If they are accused of terrorism, then
they should be brought before a court with due judicial process
being observed...It is up to the Kiev authorities to present the
evidence and then a have a due process of law,” he said.

Keeping the journalists in detention and isolation, which the
Ukrainian authorities are doing instead, “is not correct and
is not acceptable.”

“It has got to a situation where if the Kiev authorities
believe that all separatists are terrorists, then all journalists
who communicate with them and engage in interviews with them and
pass on information to them, they then become terrorists as well.
So therefore you have got an extraordinary situation in which
journalists are not able to carry out their duties in eastern
Ukraine,” McCauley said.